Thus, whilst not discounting the possibility of a long-standing personality trait, the appeal for imaginative empathy with which this chapter began is also its ending.
Could this be the reward for his act of imaginative empathy?
Dunant shows signs of having the linguistic flair to join that company, but here she seems unable to consistently penetrate history with imaginative empathy.
It impresses the eye of any visitor and stirs an imaginative empathy towards those who would have had to assault such apparently daunting defences.
Richard Ellmann, in his biography of James Joyce, achieved a considerable feat of imaginative empathy.
It takes imagination to see what is important in the lives of people who don't have one's own advantages, and that kind of imaginative empathy used to be considered a Labour prerequisite.
Selection pressures favour such psychological innovations as imaginative empathy, joint attention, moral judgment, project-oriented collaboration and the ability to evaluate one's own behaviour from the standpoint of others.
Mr. Meyers himself writes that Wilson's lack of imaginative empathy was what prevented him from becoming a successful fiction writer and playwright.
The self-consciousness that results shuts the lid on imaginative empathy.
Verlet wrote a poem in celebration of Couperin which accompanied the release, the closing lines of which exemplify her great imaginative empathy with this key French composer: